US man admits building remote control for 'KKK' X-ray device intended to kill Muslims

Eric Feight, a control systems engineer, pleads guilty to providing material
support to terrorists

Eric Feight arrives for his sentencing at the James T. Foley Federal Courthouse in Albany, upstate New YorkPhoto: AP

By AP

10:09AM GMT 17 Dec 2015

A New York man who admitted building a remote control for a mobile X-ray device intended to kill Muslims has been sentenced to eight years in prison.

Eric Feight, 57, pleaded guilty in 2014 to providing material support to terrorists. He was sentenced on Wednesday in federal court in Albany.

Feight, a control systems engineer, told US district judge Gary Sharpe that co-defendant Glendon Scott Crawford first approached him to help create a mobile X-ray to sterilise medical waste, only later telling him it could be used to target Muslim terrorist cells operating in the US.

"Potential targets were never discussed with me," Feight said. The married father of three said he became afraid to drop out after Crawford introduced him to two seemingly dangerous investors in the project, actually FBI undercover agents.

He procrastinated for six months in delivering the remote control while refusing to integrate it to directly operate the actual X-ray machine the agents brought, adding he did not think it would work, he said.

"You understood what it was you were doing," Mr Sharpe said. The machine could have worked and killed people as intended, he said.

Feight's sentence was shorter than the 15 years prosecutors requested.

Crawford, 51, an industrial mechanic at General Electric in Schenectady, where Feight was a subcontractor, was convicted of attempting to produce a deadly radiological device, conspiring to use a weapon of mass destruction and distributing information about weapons of mass destruction. He could face 25 years in prison at his sentencing in March.

Investigators taped Crawford, a Navy veteran and also a family man with no criminal history, calling Islam "an opportunist infection of DNA" and approaching a Ku Klux Klan grand wizard who was an FBI informant for support with the X-ray.

Feight and Crawford were arrested in 2013 and have been jailed since.

Investigators began tracking Crawford in 2012 after he approached two Albany-area Jewish groups. Authorities said the device was inoperable. Nobody was hurt.